Create a Linkedin Profile

Why LinkedIn?

A better question to ask is: Why notLinkedIn? Did you know that 6,264 Hampshire students and alums have LinkedIn profiles? That's a lot of networking. And, according to Jobvite's 2013 Social Recruiting Survey, 92% of employers currently use some form of social networking to find strong candidates, and 86% of employers research candidates' LinkedIn profiles before or after interviews.

Having an outstanding profile allows friends, classmates, and potential employers to see prior and recent highlights of your education, experience, skills, and projects. It's also a great way to see what other people are doing, participate in discussions in groups of interest to you, and discover organizations and activities you may not have known about.

Photo

Choose a professional-looking headshot, rather than something more casual

Remember, LinkedIn is focused on your work life, not your personal life

Headline

LinkedIn will automatically list your current title

You may want to customize your headline to be a broader statement about yourself

Examples: Artist and Educator, Anything with Words, Community Organizing and Social Justice, Aspiring Neuropsychologist

Summary

Write your summary in the first person

Share something about your professional identity, what you're looking for, and what's unique about your skills and abilities

Include contact information to make it easier for people to contact you

Use action verbs and strong, clear language

Recommendations

Only people with LinkedIn profiles can be recommenders

Personalize your request when asking connections for recommendations

Start with current or previous faculty, advisors, and supervisors/bosses

In turn, offer to write recommendations for others

Connections

When you're getting started, connect with people you actually know

When possible, write a brief, personal message with your request to connect

Begin with family and friends, classmates, co-workers and supervisors from current or previous internships, jobs, and volunteer positions, and teachers and professors from Hampshire and anywhere else you've studied.

Public Profile URL

Make your LinkedIn URL more personal and user-friendly

Next to the URL, click "Edit," then click on "Edit public profile url" on the lower right hand side of the page

Consider professional associations, such as American Writers and Artists, Inc. or LGBT Network

Interests

Include professional interests here

Personal interests, if you do include them, should stand out in some way

Other Optional Sections

Courses: Especially useful for current students and more recent grads

Test Scores: Include if you are in a professional field, such as law, medicine, or teaching, if they represent you well

Honors and Awards: Include all

Languages: Include foreign languages along with your level of proficiency ("Beginner-level Spanish," "Proficient in written and spoken German," "Fluent in Cantonese," or "Bilingual, English/French")

Projects: Don't forget your Div work, as well as any other significant projects you've contributed to or led

Organizations: Include relevant on- and off-campus groups you are/were active in

Publications: Ranging from research to creative writing

Certifications: e.g. EMT, Red Cross, TESL

Volunteering and Causes: What do you care about or spend time helping with outside of your work?

Best Practices

LinkedIn is ever-changing. To get the most benefit from your free membership, visit frequently: once a day, or at least several times a week. You only need to spend 15 minutes a day to get real value from your presence here. Take some time to read your connections' updates, leave comments, scan group discussions, connect with new people (set a goal of 3-5/week), write recommendations for friends and co-workers, search for job opportunities, and keep your profile current and interesting.

This infographic spells out how to use your LinkedIn account more effectively for your job search and business building endeavors.

A Note on Privacy Settings

By default, your entire LinkedIn profile is public. According to LinkedIn expert Wayne Breitbarth, this kind of transparency--allowing your connections to see who your other connections are--is actually a valuable step in the networking process. You can, however, always go to Profile Settings to uncheck any profile features you'd prefer not be visible to non-connections.

Search Tools

LinkedIn Job Search Engine Leverage the world’s largest professional network to connect with opportunity. Use LinkedIn Jobs to harness the power of your network and get hired. LinkedIn Jobs surfaces insights such as whom you know at a company, providing you an edge in your job search.

LinkedIn Internships Use the power of LinkedIn to take the first step in your professional career with the internship finder.

LinkedIn Salary Discover your earning potential with LinkedIn Salary. Explore salaries by job title and location. See how years of experience, industry, location and more can impact your salary.

LinkedIn ProFinder LinkedIn's new professional services marketplace that helps to connect entrepreneurs and freelancers with real business projects.

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